"like the tingling sensation of a spider walking on your forearm"
perfect summation of this album.
Yeah, I agree with you in saying that this isn't Timber Timbre's best work, but I think it's the best possible gateway to the band and links to the rest of their discography clearly. Essentially, this is the "start here" album on the Timber Timbre flowchart, with arrows labeled "rawer and lo-fi," "more like this," and "what if instead of spooky woods, California" leading to Medicinals, their self-titled album, and Hot Dreams respectively.
Plus, this is probably their most outwardly "spoooooky" album, which seemed appropriate for the holiday.
My personal favorite is Hot Dreams, but despite being a kick-ass album, it isn't really indicative of the rest of the band's work.
You also correctly identified Beat the Dead Horse, Under Your Spell, and Lay Down In The Tall Grass as pure quality.
Search found 22 matches
Return to “SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]”
- Sun Nov 05, 2017 2:50 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
- Tue Oct 31, 2017 7:50 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 33 - "Creep On Creepin' On"]
I'd say Obelisk, Swamp Magic, Lonesome Hunter, and Souvenirs all qualify as "folk" on Creep On.G-Man wrote: ↑Tue Oct 31, 2017 12:18 pm THAT HANDSOME DEVIL:
Another attribute I've noticed is that the artists are very intentional about portraying an image through their music. Some of the little things, like a laugh here, an extra side comment to the listener there, seem like things more suited to a live show, so it's like their trying to capture some of their stage persona on the record. It's fine on this album but it might wear thin over multiple albums for me. Another analogy I came up with to describe the album is this: take every single Quentin Tarantino movie soundtrack, put it in a blender, and add a healthy dose of Tarantino's desire to be intentionally hip with everything he does, and it might sound like A City Dressed in Dynamite.
TIMBRE TIMBRE:
How is this a variant of folk music? To me it just sounds like quasi-tongue-in-cheek gothic alternative.
Timber Timbre changes their sound from album to album. Their early stuff is their folkiest, and was literally recorded in a cabin in the middle of the woods. After they signed with an indie label, they gradually added more and more instrumentation and production values, while still keeping the same general atmosphere to their music for their next couple albums (Creep On being included in that.)
After the release of this album, they went into more varied and retro territory. Hot Dreams was a tribute to California, and was made to sound like 50's film scores/the closest thing to gothic country ever concocted. Their latest album
- Mon Oct 09, 2017 3:08 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 25 - "Fetish Bones"]
reeeeesubmitinsertnamehere wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2017 6:55 pm Timber Timbre - Creep On Creepin' On / 2011 / Freak Folk / 10 Tracks / 39:28
For spooky Halloween times, preferably.
- Fri Sep 08, 2017 11:25 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 25 - "Fetish Bones"]
Spoiler: show
- Fri Sep 08, 2017 6:55 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 25 - "Fetish Bones"]
Timber Timbre - Creep On Creepin' On / 2011 / Freak Folk / 10 Tracks / 39:28
For spooky Halloween times, preferably.
For spooky Halloween times, preferably.
- Sun Jun 25, 2017 11:39 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 15 - "All Hail West Texas"]
HAIL SATAN
- Sat May 27, 2017 11:22 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [(redo) Week 11 - "A Passion Play"]
Album Suggestion:


- Sun Apr 16, 2017 10:28 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 10 - "> album title goes here <"]
Voted Option A.
I'm submitting an album that's more or less diametrically opposed to Bish Bosch: All Hail West Texas by The Mountain Goats.
I'm submitting an album that's more or less diametrically opposed to Bish Bosch: All Hail West Texas by The Mountain Goats.
- Mon Apr 10, 2017 8:20 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 9 - "Whole Stories"]
My rankings out of what I've been able to listen to:Ricochet wrote:
As you can see, I've made modifications, but do please verify that I haven't changed any of your ratings in the process of flipping them over.
Beneath the Brine: 2.5/5
Fishmans: 4/5
World Music: 3.5/5
Bish Bosch: 5/5
Woodface: 2/5
Arthur: 4/5
- Sat Mar 11, 2017 10:36 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
There's a difference between saying that this album isn't your kind of thing, and Scott Walker has no talent or skill. I'll fight the latter tooth and nail.
- Sat Mar 11, 2017 10:34 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
I think you're objectively wrong.Epignosis wrote:It's art. I get it.
It's bad art. A cross in a jar of urine is art. It's bad art. It doesn't take any talent to deliver. This album is talentless. If I am going to spend my time listening to music, I want to hear skill.

- Sat Mar 11, 2017 11:54 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
Y'all people quitting halfway before you even get to hear Epizootics! 

- Sat Mar 11, 2017 11:05 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
I'll write enough words about this album to make up for all of youse.
- Fri Mar 10, 2017 2:27 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
First off, thank you S~V~S for responding so well to the album! I knew when I picked it that it wasn't exactly an "accessible" album that would be to everyone's tastes. Really, I was hoping for one person who hadn't heard it before to discover it and see what I saw in the album, so thank you for giving me that.
Now, Rico, another astoundingly good album review, as usual. I know that you were able to read into the lyrics of the closing track of the album "The Day The "Conducator" Died (An Xmas Song)," in relation to the execution of Nicolae Ceaușescu, but the entire album is filled with dense wordplay and esoteric historical references.
I'd like to try and provide some facts and interpretations to the lyrics in order to help people understand that this album isn't just mere fuckery for the sake of fuckery, but, to borrow an analogy from Rico, a work of Ulysseys-level density and depth.
Hopefully, this gratuitous exercise helped some of you see some meaning behind the hunk of anti-matter that is this album and will help you appreciate it more on future listens. The info behind these analyses, I got from genius.com, liner notes, interviews with Walker himself, and my own diseased psyche.
Now, Rico, another astoundingly good album review, as usual. I know that you were able to read into the lyrics of the closing track of the album "The Day The "Conducator" Died (An Xmas Song)," in relation to the execution of Nicolae Ceaușescu, but the entire album is filled with dense wordplay and esoteric historical references.
I'd like to try and provide some facts and interpretations to the lyrics in order to help people understand that this album isn't just mere fuckery for the sake of fuckery, but, to borrow an analogy from Rico, a work of Ulysseys-level density and depth.
Spoiler: show
- Sun Mar 05, 2017 4:00 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
Here's some choice lyrical excerpts for those who don't mind being spoiled.
Spoiler: show
- Sun Mar 05, 2017 12:31 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
Thank you kindly.Ricochet wrote:2006's The Drift
- Sun Mar 05, 2017 12:04 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 4 - "Bish Bosch"]
Well, I may have to provide some context here. This is an album that both requires and defies it.
Scott Walker started as a member of a 60's British Invasion boy band called The Walker Brothers. They weren't brothers, and none of them had the last name Walker. They cultivated a "glossy-haired and handsome familial image" while producing fairly standard for the time songs like The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine No More. [ ]
At one point, their UK fan club had more members than The Beatles' fan club.
Unfortunately, due to group tension, and a few singles that didn't top the charts, the Walker Brothers split up, allowing Scott to go off and make a solo career. He made four stunning albums of 60's baroque pop that ranged from covers of popular country and western songs, to risque and profane Jaques Brel covers, and bizarre, increasingly dark original material. [ ] [ ]
This was about the time that David Bowie began to admire and draw influence from Scott, who is a constant target of praise in Bowie interviews.
After releasing these four albums, and five more intentionally mediocre albums designed to fulfill studio contract obligations, Scott took a sabbatical from the music industry. He threw himself into intense study of contemporary and classical music, which included a sojourn in Quarr Abbey, a monastery on the Isle of Wight, to study Gregorian chant.
Then, in 1978, he reunited with the Walker Brothers to produce an album where he wrote and composed four new songs, including Nite Flights and The Electrician.
These tracks were heavily influenced by Brian Eno and David Bowie's then-recent art-rock pioneering, and according to Eno and Bowie, outpaced their own output in terms of bizarre qualities and gorgeousness.
This is when Scott Walker moved into a set pattern of releasing music. A new album every nine or so years, each one more demented, esoteric, and experimental than the last. Dark gothic compositions that combine rock and modern classical music with a smattering of obscure historical references and a strong desire to simply mess with the listening audience.
2006's The Drift features, among other things, the distressed braying of a donkey, a demonic Donald Duck impression, and a live recording of a dead pig being repeatedly punched.
2012's Bish Bosch is only more aberrant and outre.
Scott Walker started as a member of a 60's British Invasion boy band called The Walker Brothers. They weren't brothers, and none of them had the last name Walker. They cultivated a "glossy-haired and handsome familial image" while producing fairly standard for the time songs like The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine No More. [ ]
At one point, their UK fan club had more members than The Beatles' fan club.
Unfortunately, due to group tension, and a few singles that didn't top the charts, the Walker Brothers split up, allowing Scott to go off and make a solo career. He made four stunning albums of 60's baroque pop that ranged from covers of popular country and western songs, to risque and profane Jaques Brel covers, and bizarre, increasingly dark original material. [ ] [ ]
This was about the time that David Bowie began to admire and draw influence from Scott, who is a constant target of praise in Bowie interviews.
After releasing these four albums, and five more intentionally mediocre albums designed to fulfill studio contract obligations, Scott took a sabbatical from the music industry. He threw himself into intense study of contemporary and classical music, which included a sojourn in Quarr Abbey, a monastery on the Isle of Wight, to study Gregorian chant.
Then, in 1978, he reunited with the Walker Brothers to produce an album where he wrote and composed four new songs, including Nite Flights and The Electrician.
These tracks were heavily influenced by Brian Eno and David Bowie's then-recent art-rock pioneering, and according to Eno and Bowie, outpaced their own output in terms of bizarre qualities and gorgeousness.
This is when Scott Walker moved into a set pattern of releasing music. A new album every nine or so years, each one more demented, esoteric, and experimental than the last. Dark gothic compositions that combine rock and modern classical music with a smattering of obscure historical references and a strong desire to simply mess with the listening audience.
2006's The Drift features, among other things, the distressed braying of a donkey, a demonic Donald Duck impression, and a live recording of a dead pig being repeatedly punched.
2012's Bish Bosch is only more aberrant and outre.
- Sun Feb 19, 2017 12:18 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 2 - "98.12.28 Otokotachi no Wakare"]
For such a pleasant album and performance, it has quite the sad backstory.
- Wed Feb 15, 2017 3:57 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 1 - "Beneath the Brine"]
It's like if Anthony Fantano had an accent and more than an ounce of intelligence. You've got the shelf in the background and everything.Ricochet wrote:For your eyes only
Spoiler: show
LIGHT 9.
BEST NEW REVIEWER.
- Tue Feb 14, 2017 9:31 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 1 - "Beneath the Brine"]
THOUGHTS AFTER 1 AND A HALF LISTENS:
I agree with others saying that the titular song is the best produced. At its best, the album reminds me of the varied instrumentation and folk roots of an Elephant Six project, and at its worst like an easy-breezy prototypical indie pop chorus trifle, that wouldn't seem out of place in a soap commercial. (And this is coming from an indie pop FAN.)
Nevertheless, I like it. I'm in Epi's camp with regards to the singer's gender, although maybe I'm just used to aberrant vocalist stylings.
I agree with others saying that the titular song is the best produced. At its best, the album reminds me of the varied instrumentation and folk roots of an Elephant Six project, and at its worst like an easy-breezy prototypical indie pop chorus trifle, that wouldn't seem out of place in a soap commercial. (And this is coming from an indie pop FAN.)
Nevertheless, I like it. I'm in Epi's camp with regards to the singer's gender, although maybe I'm just used to aberrant vocalist stylings.
- Tue Feb 14, 2017 9:27 pm
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: SAW [Week 1 - "Beneath the Brine"]
Already got it covered. Bish Bosch, week four.thellama73 wrote:But at some point I plan to nominate an album of horrible noise, so knock yourself out.
I'm not quite sure any of you will like it, but I think we'll have fun discussing it.
- Fri Feb 10, 2017 10:59 am
- Forum: Tin Pan Alley
- Topic: SAW [Week 64 - "Home of the Strange"]
- Replies: 2046
- Views: 114327
Re: New activity maybe
Scott Walker - Bish Bosch (on Spotify)

